Shedding Light on the Isolation of Luminous Blue Variables
Erin Aadland, Philip Massey, Kathryn F. Neugent, Maria R. Drout

TL;DR
This study re-evaluates the spatial distribution of luminous blue variables (LBVs) in nearby galaxies using comprehensive photometric data, finding that LBVs are not more isolated than other massive stars, supporting the standard evolutionary model.
Contribution
It introduces a robust photometric method to assess LBV distribution, challenging previous findings based on incomplete spectroscopic data.
Findings
LBVs are similarly distributed as BBSs and WRs.
LBVs are not more isolated than other massive stars.
The spatial distribution supports the standard massive star evolution model.
Abstract
In the standard view of massive star evolution, luminous blue variables (LBVs) are transitional objects between the most massive O-type stars and Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars. With short lifetimes, these stars should all be found near one another. A recent study of LBVs in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) found instead that LBVs are considerably more isolated than either O-type stars or WRs, with a distribution intermediate between that of the WRs and red supergiants (RSGs). A similar study, using a more restricted sample of LBVs, reached the opposite conclusion. Both studies relied upon the distance to the nearest spectroscopically identified O-type star to define the degree of isolation. However, our knowledge of the spectroscopic content of the LMC is quite spotty. Here we re-examine the issue using carefully defined photometric criteria to select the highest mass unevolved stars ("bright…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
